Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Educated women less inclined to use dialectal words

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Sep, 2014 10:06 AM
    Women, especially if they are educated, are less likely to use dialectal words of a language than men, a study says.
     
    Though the study focused on a group of speakers in a single Italian region, the modelling methods used could be applied to predict how geography and demographics could affect the language used by speakers of other languages, the researchers noted.
     
    Men, farmers and speakers further from the city of Florence were more likely to use dialectal, Tuscan-specific words than women, while speakers with higher levels of education were more likely to use standard, Italian words, the findings showed.
     
    For the study, Martijn Wieling from the University of Groningen in the Netherlands and colleagues used a statistical modelling technique to predict whether speakers in Tuscany use words from standard Italian or words unique to local dialects.
     
    The researchers studied how over 2,000 speakers of Italian and Tuscan dialects referred to 170 different concepts.
     
    The Italian word for cheese, for example, is formaggio; a Tuscan speaker may refer to this instead as cacio.
     
    Using a technique known as generalized additive mixed modelling, the researchers examined how the location of a speaker, as well as demographic information such as their age, sex, and education level, are likely to affect whether a speaker will use the standard (Italian) or dialectal (Tuscan) form for a given concept.
     
    The study provided new insight into dialect patterns.
     
    "For example, old speakers were more likely than young speakers to use their local dialect's terms for frequently used concepts, but both young and old speakers showed similar patterns of usage for less frequently used words," the researchers concluded.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Language.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Parents' phone calls put teenage drivers in danger

    Parents' phone calls put teenage drivers in danger
    Instead of helping teenagers drive safely, many parents distract their kids with their pesky calls, says a study....

    Parents' phone calls put teenage drivers in danger

    Horses not affected by rider's sex

    Horses not affected by rider's sex
    Horses do not have a preference for male riders and are not bothered too much about who is riding them. So get on to that saddle now....

    Horses not affected by rider's sex

    Too much twitter may drive you crazy

    Too much twitter may drive you crazy
    If you have a tendency to read and post tweets for several hours a day, watch out for psychiatric disorders...

    Too much twitter may drive you crazy

    Monkey owns copyright for selfie, Wikipedia tells photographer

    Monkey owns copyright for selfie, Wikipedia tells photographer
    A selfie taken by a black macaque on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi three years back has become a tug of war between Wikipedia and the photographer...

    Monkey owns copyright for selfie, Wikipedia tells photographer

    Brain judges trustworthiness of faces at first look

    Brain judges trustworthiness of faces at first look
    Even before you consciously see the face of a person, your brain can judge his/her trustworthiness, says a study...

    Brain judges trustworthiness of faces at first look

    Porn viewing puts women at cybersex addiction risk

    Porn viewing puts women at cybersex addiction risk
    Women who regularly visit pornography sites on internet are at a greater risk of developing cybersex addiction, says a significant study....

    Porn viewing puts women at cybersex addiction risk